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Show January 3j ' Page Two THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD ' , T r . I allotment Father ; (Cflassiiffiiedl Adls MISCELLANEOUS INCOME TAX RETURNS FEDERAL & STATE $5 up H & R BLOCK CO. Nation's Largest Tax Service We guarantee accurate prepara-tion of every tax return. If we make any errors that cost you any penalty or interest, we will pay the penalty or interest. 175 W. 3rd So., Provo. FR Weekdays 7 p.m., Sat., 5 p.m. all FOR SALE BELL Boy boats, Johnson Mo-tors, Marine supplies, Pills-bur- y feeds, garden supplies, mowers, tillers. Robertson's Marine and Garden Center. HTJ a25tfc CLEANING by the pound, 25c lb. Hats cleaned or blocked. Expert alterations. Quality Cleaners, 85 West 2nd South. Phene HTJ n9tfc FOR RENT WHEELCHAIRS, crutches for rent. Haymond Drug Co. Ph. HU jl3tfc FURNISHED apt. Inquire at 54 No. 2nd East. s6tfc APARTMENTS for bachelors or couples. Inquire Carroll's Motel. 26 No. Main. nltfc basement apt. furn. FULL Line of Genealogy Sup-plies, genealogy copy work, Castleton's, 130 So. Main. m24tfc ART Supplies, paints, brushes, canvas boards, canvas and stretchers, water colors, etc. Castleton's, 130 So. Main. m24tfc FIREPLACE Wood. 1st ward Elders. $10 per load. Call HU-9-50- or HU dl3tfc home with 2 333 E. 2nd No. Phone 489-671- 2. N8tfc 3 OR 4 room apt. Outside en-trance. Utilities furnished. Washing facilities available. 197 E. 2nd No. HU n29tfc NEWLY decorated apartment. HU d20tfc furnished apt Heat, water, furnished. $40. HU 621 E. 400 So. d20tfc UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom1 apt., heat and hot water fur-nished. Laundry room. HU9-405- 9. jlOtfc SMALL house, large yard, $40. Call 489-662- 0. jlOtfc. FURNISHED apt.. 3 room mo-der- n at 310 West Center. Call HU9-526- 4 jlOtfc. SMALL, modern, 1 bedroom home, all utilities furnished, large yard, garden space. $65. Call HU9-662- 0 jlOtfc FURNISHED apt., carpeted, utilities paid. Inquire 294 So. 300 West. jlOtfc OR LEASE 3 bedroom furnish-e-d home, garage, fully car-peted, washer, dryer, good location. Jim Thorn, HU9-536- 1. ' jlOtfc FURNISHED 3 room apt., steam heat, garage, laundry room. Adults. 231 East 300 South, call HU9-529- 0 jlOtfc 3- -ROOM furnished house, 294 No. 1st East. Call HU j24tfc 4- -ROOM Brick home, garage attached, gas furnace & gas water heater, no dogs. Phone HU j24tfc Apartment. Heat and hot water furnished. Floor coverings. Electric range. Ph. HU 667 So. 1st East. baths. 5 years old. Gas heat. Good location. Call HU for appointment. d20tfc A PERFECT home for retired couple. Good location. For details call R. D. Frazier of Kolob. HU j24tfc GAS RANGE, excellent con-dition. Reasonable. H U jlOtfc OR RENT home 1245 South 500 East. Call HU9-667- 4 or HU9-619- 7. jlOtfc ONE ACRE, garage, patio and two bedroom home Only $5,960; easy terms. Kolob Realty. Call Frazier, HU9-447- 4. j31 SPINET Piano this area. Take over small monthly pay-ments. For more details write Credit Manager, Box 148, Sugar House Station, Salt Lake City, Utah. fl4 UPRIGHT gas space heater. $12. Good condition. See at 60 E. 2nd No. f7 MISCELLANEOUS TEST your own radio and TV tubes FREE at Haymond Drug. jl4tfc COLONIAL MANOR Rest Home. Clean, modern, best of care. Reasonable. A visit in-vited. Call or write Nephi. Utah. o4tfc GUARANTEED watch repairs. Standard ' watch cleaned, $4.50. Doug Brinkerhoff, 315 So. 3rd West. j5tfc RADIO, TV, record players, re-corders 5 qualified technic-ians to serve you. Over 26 years service in Utah County Ralph's Radio and TV, Provo FR j8tfc PICTURES of First Ward Cha- - pel for Book of Remem-brance, scrapbook, etc. Now available. Contact any First Ward Elder or the bishopric. dl3tfc f7 home, 1 baths, with refrigerator, gas range. Unfurnished. HU j31tfc unfurnished apt., gas range, utility room. Call HU-9-649- 2. 373 So. 13th East. j31tfc HOUSE for couple or students. $30. Inquire 264 E. 3rd So. j31tfc APT. partly furnished. 46 So. 4th East. Call HU j31tfc WORK WANTED WILL tend children in my home by the hour or day. Call HU d20tfc WILL build car ports, extra rooms, remodel or build new homes. Grant F. Thomas, call 798-370- 6, Spanish Fork. Free estimates. jlOtfc. IRONING at my home. Call HU9-680- 6. JlOtfc . FOUND MONEY during Christmas holi-days. Call HU j31 HOUSE plans: FHA and con-ventional. F. Keith Davis, 333 East 4th North. HU d20tfc DESERT TRAVEL BUREAU ALL Airline Tickets issued at Airport Prices. COMPLETE TRAVEL SERVICE 58 North University FR m3tfc WHEN you need insurance see LuDean Litster, C.L.U. or phone HU Be sure Insure Today. d4tfc CERAMIC Tile work, call Ben-nie- 's Tile Company. All work guaranteed. Free estimates. 798-681- 9. 160 So. 200 East Spanish Fork. al2tfc PHOTOSTAT copies made of valuable papers, birth certi-ficates, genealogical sheets, etc. Keith's Kameras, 130 So. Main. HU s20tfc WE haul junk, clean basements, do yard work and other odd jobs. Also tear down old buildings. Have own truck. Phone FR dl3tfc MONEY money! Would you I --p; i H I iWlillBBMMIli SHELVING FC2 SIX ' FRUIT ROOKS ' f MAVRf orgarace jj I i'Ji'tl DS sections e : 'A 5JE LIKES S5.0D - Lima Bes i N Stta!,0...Sh al Garden Green ard I t "V . " Sa?e Cre Market. Here miie' 303 s jj V 1 are some tenific food spec- - i t 8 , J ials that will appeal to 0 TOr I.IJ jj both men and women. J. PCII M AIMS Moliday Ok I GROUND BEEF . 2 lbs. 89c RIB STEAK. . . hi Asparagus Toilet Tissue& 3 fcr 11 rj A11 green spears m TelW Bow. 300 size 4 1.00 SOlfe tacke'S 7 P Bandaids " pkg. 49c chili 3 fcr f Bisquick llge pkg. 43c Cocoa ) Canned Milk m 8 for 1.00 PorktTJ Ketchup 4 for 89c J'""" wkeMBSTfiSr 3 fcr C ' . BANANAS' 2 ODds, 2: ASSETS 1 Dibs. 3?i For the Record... We pay by (Check Paying bills by check is business-like- . It pro- - vides an automatic receipt, and a running history of each transaction. What could be more convenient that keeping your money in your pen? The postman does the walking. Service charge? None. Just $2.00 for a book of 20 Thrifti-Check- s. And they're even personalized with your name and address. Regular and ' ThriftNChecIc " I raoaa - ) s like to supplement your in-come? Only aggressive, am-bitious people need apply. HU9-422- 5. Male and Female. RAILROAD INDUSTRY NEEDS MEN 17 to 29 to qualify as Telegraph, Tele-type, Telephone operators, clerks and agents. Positions available to those who quali-fy after short training with low tuition. Qualified men earn $450 a month plus over-time, vacations, transporta-tion, hospitalization and re-tirement. For immediate per-sonal interview, write Rail-road Communication Train-ing, Box RCT Springville Herald. Give name, age, ex-act address and phone. fl4c WASHER Repair, 20 yrs. ex-perience. All makes. Quick service, reasonable rates. ' Used, rebuilt washers for sale. 141 So. Main, Spring-ville, or call AC j31tfc of !-- people dies; funeral Friday1 Funeral services win v n Friday at 11 a.m Provo Fifth ward, fo, o ander Mortensen 81 .. jj, A. H. Mortensen "J-- . h, Grant (Maxine) piti, p, this city, who died TiT pi a heart attack at Utah',- h Hospital. , Friends may call at tv Mortuary, Provo, T". evening and before n-vices-- Burial will be jj'-- ' w Born in Brigham Qt ' B tember 21, 1881, Mr. M,l ai had made his home V since 1904, and had eita the plumbing and heahv al ness the greater porti0I1e si adult life. Cc He married Ivy xn p den in the Salt LakeJJ S; Aug. 9, 1905. le He is survived er by s;y and daughters and a t Jc Leon, at Long Beach, Springville gets from storage project (Continued from Page 1) Udall for final the interior allocations. First power production 1963 is expected in September and the first block of project power will comeunit at Flam tial generating ing Gorge Dam. First deliveries of power will be continuously stepped up to full amounts as successive gen-erators at various power plants between 1963 go into operation and 1965. According to the formula in Secretary Wall's marketing criteria, the Northern Division Utah and (Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico) will receive the bulk of the power. The South-ern Division (Arizona and por-tions of Nevada and California) will have a permanent allot-ment of 20 of Storage Pro-ject summer capability and seven per cent of winter. Springville man travels with U.S. Marines Marine Private Jefferson K. Miner, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson K. Miner of 839 South 2nd East, Springville, was among 900 Marines who spent Thanksgiving Day in the Caribbean, Christmas in South-ern California, New Year's Day in Hawaii and is now in Oki-nawa. The Marines were among 18,000 men called from the West Coast for the United States quarantine operations in the Caribbean during Novem-ber. They returned to Camp Pendleton, Calif., early in De-cember and departed Dec. 27 for Okinawa. New Year's Day was spent in Hawaii. The unit in which the Mar-ines serve is the First Battal-ion of the Seventh Marine Re-giment. The Battalion has joined the Third Marine Divi-sion on Okinawa as part of the Seventh Fleet's force in readi-ness in the Far East. Their training will take them to Japan, the Philppines and Hong Kong. Utah: Growers reported 174,-00- 0 cwt sound onions in stor-age on Jan. 1, 1963, or 62 percent of the 1962 crop. This compares to 78,000 cwt. on hand a year ago and 108,000 cwt. as the average for January 1, 1957-6- 1. RECORD IN ROCK - A new record in ore-was- te removal has been set at Kcnnecotts Utuh Copper Division mine in Bingham Canyon. The company reported that 102 million tons of ore and waste were handled at the mine in 1962, compared to the old record of 98,960,411 tons moved in 1961. Of the 102 million tons, 73 million was waste, also a new record for a single year. The previous waste record of 71,108,020 was set in 1961. The 29 million tons of ore handled in 1962 is not a new mark. That was set in 1943, when 35 million tons of ore was removed from the mine. The 102 million tons would make up a railroad train 7,045 miles long, reaching from New York to San Francisco and back again. mond and lived here during, her early life. She was mar-ried to Arthur Beck in 1920 at Idaho Falls, Idaho, and they were later divorced. She was married to William V. Jamies-o- n in Bountiful, Jan. 17, 1931 and the marriage" was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Surviving are her husband, also a son Arthur R. Jamie-so- n of Salt Lake City, five grandchildren and the follow-ing brothers and sisters, Ves-per, Ted and Glen Diamond all of Springville; Arthur Dia-mond, Eugene, Oreg.; Martin Diamond, Mrs. Doris Haslam, Orem; Mrs. Mabel Betts, Pleas-ant Grove and Mrs. Gladys Geiger, San Francisco, Calif. Salt has been used success-fully to stop leaks in irrigation ditches and farm pond bottoms. Native of city dies in Murray Relatives here received word last week, of the death Mon-day, of Maude Elizabeth Dia-mond Beck Jamieson, 62, a na-tive of this city, who passed away at a Murray hospital of a heart ailment. She was born in Springville, Nov. 23, 1900, a daughter of William and Emma Weller Dia- - Former resi:V sends news ic w Mrs. Bert L. Fullm,, former Ida Packard of? Fi ville, sent a little note" en with her subscription r c0 to the Springville Her- " week, stating that Mr. r f has just been sustas member of the new y f Park bishopric. He hai as ward clerk eight y Incidentally she repor ( that many of their p: the back yard were s ' which is the first time been so cold since she on the coast. t was $5,700 in 1961, the last year for which the official figures are available. This marked a 2 gain over the preceding year. That, however, was offset, by half, by a 1 rise in consumer prices. Scatter some seeds of sweo alyssum on the soil around and between the evergreens or shrubs in your house planting. They will grow with no care at all and the resulting flow-ers will scent the air all summer and until late fall. Former resident heads business Springville Herald readers & friends always interested in the whereabouts of former resi-dents, learned this week that Reginald R. Oakley now of Silver City, South Dakota, is making a name for himself in the auctioneering business. Known throughout the area as Col. Reginald R. Oakley, he is secretary-treasur- er & chair-man of public relations for the South Dakota Auctioneers As-sociation and the attractive let-terheads of the association carries a picture of him with the president and Also Mr. Oakley was recent-ly elected president of the newly organized Top Dollar, auctioneers of America, of Sil-ver City, S.D., where he re-sides. Mr. Oakley attended schools in Springville and graduated from Springville high school, before leaving to seek his for-tune and fame in other parts. The median money income of families in the United States Hospital drive gets underway Officers of Springville and Kolob stake Primary organi-zations this week, anounced that the annual Primary Pen-ney Parade is now on and they ask the cooperation of towns-people in the drive. Every home is being contac-ted for contributions to aid with the work at the Child-ren's Hospital in Salt Lake City. Every penny contributed in the drive is sent to the hos-pital to aid children who might otherwise go without treat-ment, officers report. Each one in the family is asked to give at least two pennies for each year of his age and more if possible to make up the quota which the two Springville stakes hope to reach. doiviincj. Scored Commercial League League Standings Team: VV L Dot & Martys 19 4 Frank & Kellys 15 8 Kolob Realty .15 9 Kolob Lumber 12 12 Petes Chevron 9 15 Doug's Service 1 23 High team game: Prank & Kellys 1056, Kolob Realty 1055, Kolob Lumber 1046. Ind. high series: Jos Hudson Petes Chevron, 577; Dan Bar-ton, Petes Chevron, 565; Wally Gurr, Kolob Lumber, 562. Ind. high game: Carl Wiley Frank & Kellys, 230; Lloyd Whitehead, Dot & Martys, 218-Te- McQuirey, Kolob Realty' 208. Maybe you can't take money with you, but where can you go without it? ' |